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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Stretchline Intellectual Properties Ltd v H&M Hennes & Mauritz Ltd [2017] EWCA Civ 199 (30 March 2017) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2017/199.html Cite as: [2017] EWCA Civ 199 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
CHANCERY DIVISION
PATENTS COURT
Mr Justice Henry Carr
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
and
LORD JUSTICE FLOYD
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STRETCHLINE INTELLECTUAL PROPERTIES LIMITED |
Claimant/ Respondent |
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- and – |
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H&M HENNES & MAURITZ LIMITED |
Defendant /Appellant |
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Nicholas Caddick QC and Andrew Norris (instructed by Potter Clarkson LLP) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 21 March 2017
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Floyd:
"So, in summary, H&M agreed not to deal in any product which fell within any of the claims of the Patent and paid an agreed sum by way of costs to Stretchline. … On this basis, the parties settled their differences and entered into the Settlement Agreement."
The issue between the parties
"A considerable problem with known fabric tubing for underwires is that the ends of the underwires can penetrate the tubing, either during the course of garment manufacture or in use by a wearer.
At present, a significant proportion of brassiere (bra) manufacturers (sic) products are returned because of protrusion of the underwire through the fabric tubing."
"a method for making a tubular fabric comprising providing a support yarn and an elastomeric yarn; characterised in that a fusible yarn is also provided and in that the yarns are formed into a tubular fabric whereby the fusible yarn is arranged within the fabric tube so that it is capable of forming a penetration barrier."
Approach to construction
"Of course the position is different if the prior art is specifically acknowledged in the patent. The purposive construction would lead to a construction of a claim which did not cover that acknowledged prior art: it can hardly have been the inventor's purpose to cover that which he expressly recognises was old."
" … if possible, a specification should be construed so as not to lead to a foolish result or one which the Patentee could not have contemplated."
" … as soon as one departs from documents specifically acknowledged in the specification, the skilled reader has no basis for assuming that the patentee was aware of the document in question. Still further, where the objection is one of obviousness rather than lack of novelty, a value judgment is involved on which widely differing views are possible. It is true that if the document is said to form part of the common general knowledge, it might be said to be more likely that the patentee is aware of it. But a patentee may have been isolated from the common general knowledge, or may, despite the later finding of obviousness, have genuinely believed that he had made an invention over it."
The patent
"By "fusible yarn" we include the meaning that the yarn can be melted at a predetermined temperature and cooled to adhere to the support yarn."
"Preferably, the fusible yarn is treated by heating whereby it melts and spreads over the interior surface of the tubular fabric. On cooling, the fusible yarn adheres to the other yarns of the fabric to produce a tubular fabric having a durable inner lining of the melted fusible yarn."
"Preferably, the method of the invention comprises a further step of treating the tubular fabric by heating to melt the fusible yarn so that it spreads over the tubular fabric and is capable of forming a penetration barrier. On cooling, the melted yarn adheres to the other yarns of the fabric to form a durable inner tube lining.
…
The fabric tubing produced in accordance with the invention has a durable inner lining of fusible yarn which is extremely resistant to penetration by underwires.
…
"The preferred method of the invention produces a tubular fabric comprising a polyamide yarn, and elastomeric yarn and a fusible polyamides yarn, preferably Grilon K-85, capable of forming a penetration barrier within the fabric tube. Whilst such a product may be a valuable commercial product in itself, it is preferably subjected to a further heat treatment step to provide a durable lining of fused polyamides on the interior surface of the fabric tubing."
"A skilled person will understand that a fusible yarn of the invention is intended to include any yarn which can melt at a predetermined temperature, preferably 75-90° C, and adhere to other yarns of the fabric to form a penetration barrier. On cooling the melted fusible yarn preferably produces a coating which has a temperature in excess of the predetermined temperature and preferably in excess of 100° C"
"In contrast to known fabric tubing, the advantageous resistance to penetration property of the fabric tubing of the invention makes it well-suited for use in underwired garments intended for machine rather than hand washing …"
"Comparing the forces required to penetrate [samples of tubular fabric according to the invention] it is clear that the fabric of the invention is two or three times more resistant to penetration than a known fabric used for receiving underwires in bras."
The judgment of Henry Carr J
"A high viscosity is needed because a lower viscosity would mean that the molten polymer would simply leak out of the fabric structure. This would be particularly problematic for a tubular fabric; instead of fusing the yarns of fabric together the polymer would cause the inner surfaces of the tube to stick together defeating the object of having a tubular fabric. Therefore a high viscosity is required. However, with a polymer of higher viscosity, the woven structure of the fabric will impede the polymer flow to the extent that it simply would not form a continuous layer of the polymer. In fact, I do not think it would be possible to include enough fusible yarn within the fabric to create a continuous layer and certainly not if one uses the preferred quantities of fusing yarn referred to in the Patent (namely 5% to 15%). Indeed it would make no commercial sense to try. In my opinion these facts would have been apparent to the skilled reader."
"30. Prof. Ellis estimated that 50% of fusible yarn within the fabric would be required to form a discrete layer or liner, because the fusible yarn was too viscous to spread widely and its flow would be impeded by the main yarns in the fabric structure. He accepted during cross-examination that he would not expect the fusible material to form a full layer (T3/434/14-436/10).
31. There is very little dispute on this issue between the experts, but insofar as there is a difference of opinion, I accept the view of Prof. Shishoo. There was no suggestion that Prof. Ellis had actually tried to form a discrete layer in woven fabric using any particular proportion of fusible yarn. I find that skilled person would have known at the priority date that it would not be practical to form a discrete layer from fusible yarn in a woven fabric. Prof. Ellis thought that fusible yarn was about 10 times as expensive as the other yarns used in the invention. Because of the additional cost of such material, it would not make commercial sense to try to form a layer of such material, given that simply including a small quantity as adhesive within the structure would increase the resistance to penetration, and there was no reason to believe that a discrete layer would be any better."
"It is clear from this passage that the fusible yarn is not intended to form a barrier which is discrete from the rest of the yarns of the fabric. On the contrary, the disclosure is that the fusible yarn will adhere to the other yarns in the fabric on melting, thereby rendering the tubular fabric as a whole more durable. The reference to "durable inner lining" is to the composite of yarns with points of adhesion following melting and cooling of the fusible yarn. Prof. Ellis considered that "the use of fusible yarn in order to bond fibres together to improve fabric durability" was common general knowledge at the priority date (Ellis 1 [32]). The Patent is describing a particular application of fusible yarn, to improve the penetration resistance of tubular fabric."
"This passage is relied on by both parties. On the one hand, it is capable of meaning that the penetration barrier must be formed from the fusible yarn on its own. On the other hand, it is capable of meaning that the penetration barrier is formed by adherence of the melted yarn to other yarns in the fabric, the effect of which is to strengthen the fabric tube. Having regard to the common general knowledge, and to the entire disclosure of the Patent, in my judgment the latter interpretation is correct."
"I have reached the conclusion that the skilled person would understand that it is the fabric tube that must resist penetration and the fusible yarn is only effective when it bonds with other yarns to increase the tensile strength of the fabric tube. The claims require that the fusible yarn is (or is capable of being) the cause, or trigger, for formation of the penetration barrier, which comprises the remaining yarns as a composite structure. The claims do not require the fusible yarn to form a discrete, continuous layer, which the skilled person would know was impractical. Furthermore, it is clear from the description, and from common general knowledge, that an absolute barrier to penetration is not required. Fusible yarn is used to achieve a higher resistance to penetration than would be the case in conventional tubular fabric, in order to address the problem of underwire protrusion."
i) H&M was precluded, as this court had held, from raising, in its defence, any squeeze between non-infringement and invalidity. As the argument had developed it had become clear to be judge that this was in effect what H&M was arguing for;
ii) He had reached a clear view as to the correct interpretation of the claim. Had validity been an issue, and had this interpretation led to a finding of invalidity, he would still have been of the same view.
iii) Even if the argument had been open to H&M, the alleged squeeze between non-infringement and obviousness on the basis of common general knowledge would have failed on the evidence. In that connection the judge concluded at paragraph 68:
"In my judgment, whilst the evidence established that fusible yarn was well-known at the priority date, it did not establish that its use to increase penetration resistance in tubular fabric was common general knowledge at that date. On the contrary, this appeared to be a new use of a known material to solve a long-standing problem."
H&M's submissions on the appeal
"Q. Even though you know that is not how fusing yarn works?
A. When working on this later, I would have realised there is not enough to form a continuous layer."
Stretchline's submissions
"I can say with certainty that I have no recollection of the idea of using fusing yarn to increase resistance to penetration, or tensile strength, in tubular fabrics being something that was known at the priority date. Indeed, I firmly believe that it was not known at that date."
Discussion
Conclusion
Lord Justice McCombe